Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Quick Air Fryer Shrimp

Juicy, crisp-edged shrimp with garlic, lime, and smoky spices. Fast enough for a weeknight, bold enough to eat straight off the cutting board.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A close-up photo of air fryer shrimp with crisp edges in a white bowl, garnished with chopped parsley and lime wedges on a wooden countertop

Shrimp is my favorite kind of dinner shortcut because it cooks faster than I can talk myself out of cooking. The air fryer makes it even easier: high heat, quick cook, and those little browned edges that taste like you tried harder than you did.

This quick air fryer shrimp recipe goes big on flavor with garlic, lime, smoked paprika, and a whisper of heat. It is the kind of shrimp that works everywhere: piled into tacos, tossed over salad, slid onto rice, or eaten standing at the counter while “setting the table.”

A real photo of raw peeled shrimp in a mixing bowl being tossed with spices and olive oil, with a lime and garlic on the counter nearby

Why It Works

  • Fast and forgiving: Shrimp cook in about 6 to 8 minutes in most air fryers, with minimal babysitting.
  • Crisp edges, juicy centers: A little oil plus high heat gives you that lightly charred, restaurant-y finish.
  • Bright, bold seasoning: Lime zest and juice wake everything up, while smoked paprika adds that “what is that deliciousness?” depth.
  • Flexible serving options: Tacos, bowls, pasta, salad, or snack mode. No judgment.

Storage Tips

Air fryer shrimp are best right away, but leftovers are still very usable if you treat them gently.

Refrigerate

  • Cool and refrigerate within 2 hours, then store in an airtight container for up to 2 days.
  • Keep a lime wedge separate so you can re-brighten at the end.

Reheat (without turning them into rubber bands)

  • Air fryer: 300°F (150°C) for 2 to 3 minutes, just until warmed through.
  • Skillet: Medium-low heat with a tiny splash of oil, 1 to 2 minutes total.
  • Microwave: Use 50% power in short bursts and stop as soon as they are warm.

Freeze

  • You can freeze cooked shrimp for up to 2 to 3 months for best quality. I prefer using them within 1 month because the texture stays less bouncy.
  • Thaw overnight in the fridge and reheat gently. Add fresh lime at the end to help revive the flavor.

A real photo of cooked shrimp cooling on a plate next to a labeled airtight container on a kitchen counter

Common Questions

Do I need to thaw shrimp before air frying?

Yes, for best texture and even cooking. Thaw in the fridge overnight, or quick-thaw in a bowl of cold water for 10 to 20 minutes, until the shrimp are pliable (timing depends on size and whether they are individually frozen). Pat very dry before seasoning.

What size shrimp should I use?

Medium-large shrimp work best, like 21 to 25 count or 26 to 30 count (per pound). Smaller shrimp cook so fast they can overdo in a blink.

Can I use cooked shrimp?

You can, but you are basically just warming and seasoning. Toss cooked shrimp with the spice mix and air fry at 300°F (150°C) for 2 to 3 minutes max.

Why are my shrimp watery instead of crisp?

Usually one of three things: shrimp were not dried well, the basket was overcrowded, or the heat was too low. Pat dry aggressively, cook in a single layer with a little space between shrimp, and use 400°F (200°C). Also: lime juice is delicious, but extra liquid in the bowl can steam your shrimp, so drain or blot before air frying.

Should I preheat the air fryer?

It helps with browning. If your air fryer has a preheat setting (or your manufacturer recommends preheating), do it. If not, just add about 1 minute to the cook time and keep an eye on the shrimp.

What if I do not have smoked paprika?

Use sweet paprika, then add a tiny pinch of ground cumin or chipotle powder if you want that deeper vibe.

This shrimp recipe was born on a night when I had exactly zero patience and one lonely bag of frozen shrimp. I wanted something with crunch, heat, and a hit of lime that made it taste like a plan, not a panic.

Now it is my go-to “I swear I cook” move: toss, air fry, squeeze lime, pretend it was always this easy. Bonus points if you eat one straight out of the basket for quality control. That is science.